KarenAylwood said:
Not to hijack the thread, but I was looking into how to backup my pictures as well. I wanted to get both an external hard drive and some archival CDs/DVDs. This is probably a stupid question- but do you burn to CDs or DVDs when saving pictures? I have a "CD burner" on my computer- does this work for pictures too? I don't quite understand what I'm looking for... count me clueless
You can burn to either one. The disc itself doesn't care what the content is - it's just a blank slate that can take a certain amount of data. For CDs, it's 700 megs; for DVDs, about 4.5 gigs. Since DVDs hold approximately seven times the data and only cost about twice as much (sometimes less), they are obviously much more economical if you're burning a lot of stuff.
Your burner will have a couple logos on the front. Probably one will be "Compact Disc ReWritable", another might be "DVD-ROM", and possibly "RW DVD+ReWritable" or similar. If it's just a CD burner, then you won't have the last one and will only be able to burn CDs. DVD burners are very inexpective (as cheap as $30) but if you don't have a lot to back up, you may wish to stick to CDs for the moment.
Buy yourself a spindle of blank discs (it's far, far cheaper to buy them in a spindle - 25, 50, or 100-pack, than to buy them in a 10-pack). To actually burn the discs, your PC (or burner, if you bought the burner separately) should have come with CD burning software. This is usually Nero or Roxio Easy CD Creator, or possibly Sonic RecordNow. Any of them will work. All are fairly easy to use. Like I mentioned earlier, check to see about an option for verifying after burning, to ensure that the disc burnt error-free. Nero has a checkbox that's available during the burn, the other two set it in the options beforehand.
If you don't have any of that software, you CAN use Windows XP's built-in CD burning functionality (assuming you have XP) but I don't care for doing it that way.
You can download a trial version of Nero at
www.nero.com and probably can get trials of the others (Roxio and Sonic merged so you just have to go to
www.roxio.com now), they are usually full-featured for 30 days. I'm a big fan of Nero myself.
Of course, you need to know where on your hard drive the pictures exist - that depends on how you're getting the pictures off the camera (some programs put them different places.)
Hopefully this is some help.